By Jeff White (jwhite@virginia.edu)
VirginiaSports.com
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. — Standing outside the tunnel that leads from the visitors’ locker room to the field at Allegacy Stadium, University of Virginia tight end Tyler Neville savored the moment. Rarely does a football team rally for a stunning road win against a conference rival, and Neville knew the Cavaliers had accomplished something special Saturday night. But he was also thinking about Virginia’s next challenge.
“The excitement is there, the energy is there, and I’m hoping the fans are there next week,” Neville, a graduate transfer from Harvard, said after UVA’s 31-30 victory over Wake Forest. “This really is a program win, and we just have to follow it up with another program win next week.”
Maryland (1-1) is coming to Charlottesville for a Saturday night game at Scott Stadium, and a win would give Virginia its first 3-0 start since 2019.
“We’ve got more opportunity ahead of us,” third-year head coach Tony Elliott told his players in the Cavaliers’ jubilant locker room.
It was the ACC opener for both teams Saturday night, and the game drew an announced crowd of 30,012 at 31,500-seat Allegacy Stadium. Many Wake fans, however, left in the third quarter, presumably confident that the home team was headed toward a sixth straight victory over UVA.
The Hoos, who trailed by 14 points in the second quarter, cut their deficit to three at the half, but the Demon Deacons dominated the third quarter and led 30-17 heading into the fourth.
The Cavaliers hadn’t defeated Wake in Winston-Salem since 2002, and their prospects for breaking through looked bleak with 15 minutes to play, but they never stopped believing in themselves. Since he took over the program, Elliott has preached the importance of winning the fourth quarter. The Hoos often have faltered late in games—five of their nine losses in 2023 were by seven points or fewer—but they authored a different ending Saturday night. And that made their victory even more satisfying.
“It definitely does,” senior wide receiver Malachi Fields said. “We’ve been harping on it all week, all year, all camp. We’ve got to finish in the fourth quarter. And to be able to come out here and do that just boosts our confidence. It’s a huge win for us, huge team win. We’re just going to keep continuing to grow together and be that team that’s able to finish in the fourth quarter.”
The Hoos’ second-half comeback started with a 66-yard touchdown drive whose final three plays were passes from quarterback Anthony Colandrea to wide receiver Trell Harris. Those completions gained 18, 15 and 24 yards, respectively.
Harris, a graduate transfer from Kent State, finished with seven receptions for 91 yards and one touchdown. On the Cavaliers’ second possession, he’d dropped what would have been a 55-yard touchdown pass from Colandrea, but Harris took no missteps thereafter.
“Everyone has a bad play, and it wasn’t a bad play,” Colandrea said. “I kind of put it behind him, so I kind of put that on myself. But Trell is a really good football player, and he showed out tonight.”
Wake still led by six points after Harris’ TD, but its next drive ended when UVA linebacker Trey McDonald, who’d been pressed into service when starter Kam Robinson left with an injury, sacked Wake quarterback Hank Bachmeier on fourth down.
The defense’s focus before that play, McDonald said, was simple. “We were like, ‘Get the ball back,’ ” he said. “That’s what we talked about all week: just get the ball back to our offense, whether that’s with turnovers or big fourth- and third-down stops.”
The Cavaliers took possession with 7:20 remaining, and this time they produced a 66-yard touchdown drive capped by their version of the tush push. Into the game went the Grady Bunch, some of the team’s biggest and strongest players. Reserve quarterback Grady Brosterhous scored from the 1-yard line with 2:07 remaining, and Will Bettridge’s extra point made it 31-30.
The drive included two fourth-down receptions by Fields, who also drew a pass-interference call on a Wake defensive back. Fields finished with 11 receptions for 148 yards, both career highs.
“He’s a big-time player,” Colandrea said.
Malik Washington, who’s now in the NFL, put up record-setting numbers at UVA last season and sometimes overshadowed Fields, but No. 8 “still was one of the better guys in the ACC,” Elliott said. “And the challenge this offseason was for him to go make his stake as the best in the league. And he’s played unbelievably the last two weeks and made some huge, huge plays.”
The Deacons had two more possessions after Brosterhous’ TD. The first ended when UVA’s Malcolm Greene forced a fumble that fellow safety Antonio Clary recovered at the Cavaliers’ 29.
“It was up to one of us to go out there and try to just end the game off,” Greene said. “That’s what we prepared for all summer, all winter. We’ve been preparing for plays like that, moments like that, to just dominate and be precise and play with effort.”
The PLAY that sealed it😍 @airmgreene @AntonioClary #UVAStrong | #GoHoos⚔️ pic.twitter.com/gab8tgnnv8
— Virginia Football (@UVAFootball) September 8, 2024
The Hoos went three-and-out, but Wake used all three of its timeouts stopping the clock, and when Daniel Sparks’ 59-yard punt rolled dead at the 5, only 57 seconds remained. Wake didn’t get back to the midfield, and when the final second ticked off the clock, a frenzied celebration started on the UVA sideline that eventually moved to the locker room.
“Man, it was ecstatic,” Fields said. “Everybody was happy that we were able to finish in the fourth quarter, happy we got the job done. So it was just super exciting seeing the smiles on the guys’ faces and the joy, pure joy, in the locker room.”
Neville said: “I’ve played a lot of football. I’ve won a lot of games. Won a lot of big games. I’ve never seen anything like that. This was probably the coolest one of my life. I’m thirsty for more.”
So are the rest of the Cavaliers. “This is a huge comeback win in a game against a great team where, frankly, we felt like we could have done more,” Neville said. “So we’re going to be full of confidence come next week.”
